Former captain Imran wants revamp of Pakistan cricket

KARACHI,  (Reuters) – Former Pakistan captain Imran  Khan has called for an overhaul of the country’s cricket set-up  after the ICC warned the Pakistan Cricket Board (PCB) to improve  its governance and enforce anti-corruption measures.

“For years now our players have been linked to corruption,”  the cricketer turned politician told the Geo News channel yesterday after the International Cricket Council’s warning.

“When the spot fixing allegations first came out against our  players in the News of the World newspaper, the PCB itself  should have taken action against the players instead of waiting  for the ICC to step in,” Imran added.

The ICC suspended Pakistan test captain Salman Butt and pace  bowlers Mohammad Amir and Mohammad Asif after the Sunday  newspaper claimed they had been bribed to do spot fixing during  the fourth test against England at Lords in August.

The three players have denied any wrongdoing.

PCB chairman Ijaz Butt also had to withdraw allegations he  made against the England team that they were involved in taking  bribes to lose the third one-dayer at the Oval on Sept. 17.

“The ICC move to warn us and put us on notice is a shameful  day for every Pakistani. It is a shame for Pakistan cricket and  the reason is we don’t have any cricket institution in  Pakistan,” Imran said.

“Ijaz Butt’s governance has been a failure. He should have  resigned the moment he apologised to the England board and  withdraw his statement because they threatened him with legal  action,” he added.

Imran said although the country had lots of talent, Pakistan  cricket was in constant crisis because the board was not elected  and there was no “meritocracy” in the cricket structure.
“Tell me in which country does the president appoint the  chairman of the cricket board,” he said.

“Today we face problems because the cricket board never took  action against players accused of match-fixing.

“In order to save itself and to ensure we didn’t lose key  players the administrators were reluctant to carry out and  complete investigations against such players,” Imran said.